Executions
aside, it is far too early to write off Indonesia’s president Joko Widodo.
When the lights fade on Australia's most disturbing reality television show,
after this week's Sydney funerals for Andrew Chan and Myuran
Sukumaran, it would be tempting to write-off Joko Widodo's Indonesia. Foreign
Minister Julie Bishop and her diplomats worked tirelessly to shift the
Indonesian president from his merciless course. They mobilised a lobbying
effort that was unprecedented in breadth, intensity and sophistication. And all
that emotional energy which helped to power (and was powered by) an Australian
media frenzy, has proved futile.
Distorted
perceptions are already setting hard, as if the messy and undignified
executions of two repentant Australian drug smugglers should define the
Indonesian president and his huge and unwieldy young democracy. One emerging
view is that Jokowi's gratuitous disregard for international opinion in a
globalised world has shown him to be incompetent. Another is that he is the
puppet of Megawati Sukarnoputri, heir of the Sukarno dynasty, and he has been
desperately using the executions of foreigners to cloak his servility in a
tough theatrical guise. A third theory is that Jokowi has revealed himself to
be a Mahathir-like figure who simply revels in making life miserable for
Australia.
Any one of
these diagnoses, if correct, would be disastrous for Australia, which
depends on Indonesian co-operation for all of its most pressing security
challenges. All have been circulating not only within the Australian media but
also in the Indonesian sections of Australian universities and at the
highest levels of government in Canberra.
But perhaps
they reveal less about the objective state of play in Jokowi's Indonesia than
the national pathologies that tint perceptions on both sides of the Java Sea.
Put simply, neither Indonesia nor Australia have ever quite managed to see each
other as the serious countries they imagine themselves to be.
Jokowi has no particular warmth, or cultural affinity, or even curiosity
towards his southern neighbour, despite exporting furniture here and educating
a son in Sydney. Nor does he have ill-will.
It's just
that all the things that really matter to his country, in his view, are to be
found in Northeast Asia, the United States or Europe. Australia is neither
more nor less than a source of minor irritations.
When Jakarta
correspondent Michael Bachelard and I sat down with Jokowi in October, he urged
Australians to step beyond the tourist strips of Bali to explore one of the
world's most diverse and colourful archipelagos. He also warned the Abbott
government against pursuing narrow parochial interests, like turning asylum
seeker vessels back to Indonesia, at the expense of international norms and
expectations. "We have international law, you must respect international
law," he said.
Beyond these
sensitivities, Australia barely featured on the presidential radar. That was
the only interview with the Australian media that the otherwise media-friendly
leader has bothered to give.
The failure
of Indonesia and Australia to treat each other as serious nations belies their
respective strategic interests, which are becoming increasingly aligned.
Australia, for example, first informed Indonesia's under-resourced military
that two Chinese destroyers were sailing down between Java and Sumatra in an
unprecedented show of force in February last year, according to senior
Australian sources. Australian officials privately acknowledge they could not
hope to manage territorial tensions in the South China Sea without Indonesian
counterparts on their side. And the scourges of extremist terrorism and people
smuggling can hardly be addressed without the help of the world's largest
mostly-Muslim nation which stretches across Australia's north.
Yet when
Australia and Indonesia think about serious things like security, technology
and money they both look further north. The parochial politics of asylum
seekers, or drug smugglers, or being seen to act tough towards each other,
keep getting in the way, despite some herculean individual efforts on both
sides. Each nation has shaken off its colonial and post-colonial baggage - except
when they face each other.
At the time
of our interview, on the eve of Jokowi's inauguration, he faced a parliament
controlled by a rampaging former general, Suharto's son-in-law Prabowo
Subianto, who had the means and the will to make Jokowi's governing task
impossible. Pundits were growing pessimistic but Jokowi laughed at the
challenges ahead, saying he would fulfil his election promises and reverse what
seemed to be a hopeless minority position in Parliament within six
months.
Seven months
later, Jokowi has been badly outmanoeuvred in a battle with corrupt police
leaders, damaging fragile democratic institutions that voters had counted on
him to support. He has also been publicly humiliated by his political
matriarch, Megawati.
But what has
been forgotten is that he has already fulfilled ambitious election promises
including scrapping petrol subsidies that were burning a staggering 20 per cent
of fiscal revenues, while his counterparts in Canberra failed at the
comparatively trivial hurdle of petrol excise indexation. These savings
have enabled Jokowi to press ahead with infrastructure commitments, as
promised, despite a precipitous decline in his country's terms of trade.
Even
Jokowi's implacable parliamentary opponent, Prabowo Subianto, has been brought
to heel. "Under Prabowo, we would have almost certainly seen a
democratic reversal, not the kind of minor democratic slipping we experience
now," says Marcus Meitzner, one of the closest observers of Jokowi's rise
to power. Those who judge Indonesia's rule of law and commitment to human
dignity entirely through the prism of two Australian felons are failing to see
the forest for the trees.
Jokowi is an
inexperienced president at the helm of a vast and fractious nation that is only
part way through its passage from dynastic patronage to democratic
institutions. He has been excessively cautious with his own political machine,
obstructing his progress and opening him to attack. But while he has been
taunted as the puppet of Megawati, she has also attacked him as a
"traitor" for refusing to be just that. Writing off Jokowi just seven
months into his tenure would be wildly premature.
John Garnaut is Fairfax Media's Asia-Pacific
editor.
The Australian government is set to significantly slash its development aid to Indonesia, likely pushing the strained relationship between the two neighbors to a new low.
ReplyDeleteWhile authorities Down Under may indeed be aiming to cut back on spending, the timing of it suggests that it is more likely connected to the recent execution of two Australian drug convicts by President Joko Widodo’s administration. Canberra’s latest move suspiciously looks like a retaliatory backhand aimed at Jakarta.
The 2014-15 Australian budget saw over A$605 million ($480 million) allocated to Indonesia to fund infrastructure, education and health programs throughout the archipelago.
For our neighbors in the south, the policy is their show of disappointment, with many Australians feeling that Indonesia has not appreciated all Australia has done for the archipelago. Joko’s rejection of multiple clemency pleas for Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran despite endless calls for mercy from Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and millions of Australian citizens has been seen as Jakarta’s blatant disregard of the two country’s friendship.
For Indonesia, the aid cut will be seen as an Australian display of cockiness. The move will only solidify Joko’s support of capital punishment, while strengthening nationalistic sentiment and reminding Indonesians of former president Sukarno’s rejection of US aid in the mid 1960s, when he famously stated, “Go to hell with your aid.”
The future of Australia-Indonesia relations looks bleak, which is a waste of years of hard work. For now, it’s best for Joko and Indonesian elites to refrain from overreacting in response to the aid cut and allow the heated situation to cool off in hopes that Australia will grow friendlier after its election. Editorial Jakarta Globe